Campus Ministry USA has been preaching on campuses for nearly four decades
“Sister Pat” proudly held a bright-yellow sign with bold red and black letters that read, “YOU DESERVE HELL” during the past four days on campus.
Pat has visited hundreds of university campuses during the past 35 years to spread the message of Jesus Christ, but her message isn’t always received well.
She and her travel partner George Smock have been preaching their blunt, controversial messages in the Fresno State Free Speech Area, but ended their stay just yesterday.
Pat, who refused to give her full name, is a member of Campus Ministry USA, a Missouri-based organization that strives to persuade college students to read the Bible and “repent their sins.”
Their week-long stay on campus has caused some criticism and occasional heated debates.
“We’re not pushing a denomination,” Pat said. “We want these students to make decisions on their own.”
Pat and Smock spent several hours a day on campus since Monday, using what they call “confrontational evangelicism,” a more aggressive form of preaching Christianity. They’ve been preaching on U.S. campuses for nearly four decades, and they’re used to the criticism they receive.
Political science student and Associated Students, Inc. Senator of Resident Affairs Sean Kiernan opposed the group’s message and held a sign near the speakers that read, “You deserve hugs!” on Thursday.
“The idea that we are doomed for hell is absurd and there is no substantive reason to believe that,” Kiernan said. “Other people, including other Christians, think [the speakers] are too extreme.”
Kiernan said that a lot of students have hugged and thanked him for contributing his message.
Alejandro Vidal, a Fresno State student and member of the Christian fraternity Alpha Gamma Omega, supported Campus Ministry USA’s message. He said that Pat and Smock needed a little help conveying their beliefs in better terms, so he and his friends held signs near the speakers in support of Jesus Christ.
“We’re just trying to complete their message,” Vidal said. “We just love Jesus.”
Campus Ministry USA has traveled throughout the United States and the world, going as far as Ghana to defend and glorify God. Pat and Smock were in San Diego before visiting Fresno State, and their upcoming agenda includes campuses in Davis, Sacramento and Portland.
Coordinator of Student Involvement Josh Edrington said that initially, Pat and Smock didn’t receive permission to appear on campus. They later went through the correct procedure to use the Free Speech Area. Edrington added that similar controversial speakers have ignited violent responses in the past, but that no students have complained about Pat and Smock.
Pat said that on other large campuses, atheist student groups have organized protests. Earlier this week, Pat said that a Fresno State student became angry at Smock and “got in his face,” prompting other students to calm him down. She thinks Fresno State has been much more calm because it is a commuter school and students aren’t constantly on campus.
“This group at Fresno State has been more receptive,” she said.
In 2007, Smock ignited a debate at the University of Kansas when he publicly condemned homosexuality and called women who wear shorts “sluts.”
Kiernan said that although he disagrees with Pat and Smock’s messages, they have a right to speak their mind.
“I appreciate that there is a Free Speech Area where they can spread their message and we can counter it civilly,” he said.
Daniel J. Dick • Mar 29, 2016 at 1:58 pm
I think a big part of Christianity is sincerity and another part is humility, and to be sincere and humble, we have to admit that we have not been faithful to God, that we may want to do good, loving, sweet, and benevolent things for others, but that does not mean our hearts are always faithful and pure.
If through our love and sincerity and faithfulness, we had the potential to lead 10 souls to salvation but led only 9 because of our fear or love for comfort, wouldn’t that mean we were willing to sacrifice the eternal well being of another person for our own convenience or comfort?
Suppose our love for sin was so much that we would justify it or excuse it. Do we not call God unreasonable? Do we not accuse God? Do we not belittle God, disrespect Him, and call others to disrespect Him as well?
When we go to church and sing, “I Surrender All”, but throw God nothing but our table scraps and our refuse, don’t we patronize Him and insult Him? How is that different from what Ananias and Sapphira did? Should we be proud of the little money we put into the offering plate when it may serve as a reminder that this is all we feel God is worth, or that this is all of the good or support we would want to bring to the ministry or the people that ministry serves? Why do we give if we are not willing to give up our sin?
We may say Jesus is our Lord if we’re Christians, but do we accept Him as our Lord? Do we surrender to Him? Do we trust and obey Him? Or when sin calls for our commitment, do we give ourselves fully to sin instead? Is more of our time spent for good or for promoting evil?
Look at our church buildings on any Sunday or Wednesday night. Are they teaming with activity as they once were? Are there revival services with souls being saved and people on fire spiritually? Do we see people agonizing in prayer for lost loved ones? Or do we see people letting their loved ones and friends perish into hell forever while granting others the undeserved consolation of pretending they’re going to hell?
Do we fight tooth and nail to defend our right to sin? Do we pretend it will do nobody any harm when we know that is all a lie? Do we insist on obvious lies and put the burden onto others to provide us proof to the contrary while we sit on our lazy rear ends repeating the mantra, “Not good enough evidence…not good enough proof…? Does the proof sit in plain sight before our faces all the days of our lives while we pretend it is more intelligent and sincere to deny the obvious than to admit to it?
And when we see all that God has provided to keep us out of hell, when we see the people who have loved us, prayed for us, and warned us, when we hear about the sacrifice He made on the cross to purchase our salvation, when we hear the preacher calling us to turn from sin and receive life, when we know that our refusal to do so may lead our own children, parents, siblings, friends and others to hell by our example, when we see what we could be doing for the good of mankind and when we know every blessing we ever had or ever will have came from God in one way or another, we sit back, put on an arrogant sneer, and ask, “How could a loving God send anyone to hell?” or “How can I love an oversensitive, selfish, egotistical despot who would throw people to hell for nothing more than a trifle?” When we do that, how are we different than the rapist or murderer who kicks back and asks, “What’s so bad about what I did?” How are we different from the proverbial adulteress who wipes her mouth and says, “I have done no wrong”?
If you, by the way you live, think, and show yourself to others, indicate that you would defend your right to hate God with such intensity that you would rather go to hell for all eternity than to accept the love, the sacrifice, the leadership, the integrity, the goodness, and kindness, of an infinitely wise God, how can you blame God if He respects your right to make that choice and sends you to the eternal end you have chosen for yourself?
How can you live in sin and find fault with God?
It’s far time we all man up or woman up, accept responsibility for our decisions with integrity like adults, and make a decision. We will either accept as our Lord, sin and everything that is hellish, or we will accept as Lord, Jesus Christ. If we are scouting around for other religions, perhaps we can say it is because we see value in what other religions have to offer. Perhaps we can say it is how we were raised and it is the best thing we know. But if you have read this, or heard these preachers preaching at your university, then you probably know well that there is a problem of sin that needs to be addressed, and if you are looking for the solution to that problem in all the wrong places, it is probably because you do not want to accept the solution you already know about. One way or another, you are making your choice. And now, you have to choose whether to continue in a choice that does not work well for you, or you have to leave that choice behind and go for the right choice.
In our sin, we offended an infinite God. We owe an infinite debt. We can pay it by going to infinite punishment in hell forever, or we can accept that God Himself came down in the flesh, paid the penalty for our sin, and that met the demands of God’s very righteous and holy and fair law.
We not only offended God, but because God is infinitely good seeking the greatest good of the entire universe, it is vitally important we follow His lead given we do not have all the knowledge and wisdom He has. When we disobey God, we offend the entire universe. We declare by our actions that the greater good of the universe is not important enough for us to entrust that to God and do what is right. It shows we are willing to sin, to lie, cheat, steal, dishonor parents, dishonor God, to covet selfishly, perhaps to hate, kill, commit adultery or lust, even if it dishonors God and brings harm to others and brings harm to the universe.
When we call that a trifle, that is like committing rape or murder and calling it a trifle. It is as heinous as telling a woman that raping her was no big deal. It is as if we were in the place of Hitler telling the Jews that it is no big deal to kill a Jew. It is akin to the slave owner telling people that black lives don’t matter or telling cops that their lives don’t matter. When it costs someone else, we are inclined to call it a trifle, but when it costs us a little, that becomes a heinous crime in our minds. This shows how little regard we have for God’s law and for what is important to God or others.
And the Bible says we have all sinned and fallen short of the glory of God. Frankly, that’s a statement of the obvious. All we have to do is touch on the ten commandments a little and that convicts us immediately. Jesus says all of the commandments are met in the two commandments to love God and to love our neighbor as ourselves, but we get around that by lying about what it means to love. We congratulate ourselves and acquit ourselves when we have warm feelings, when we sit around the campfire singing kum ba yah. But we show our lack of love in so many ways.
So, when these preachers say we deserve hell, how can we say they are wrong when it seems to me that they are not only right, but obviously right?
What do we do to fix the problem? Deny it? Try to bribe God? Try to make up for our sins? Work really hard? We owe God and the universe our perfect faithfulness from birth to death. If we say we cannot do that, would we tell our husbands or wives we cannot be faithful to them, too? Would we call an affair a mere mistake and say we all make mistakes? Would we permit our spouses to have affairs on us as often as we’re willing to sin? If we find that hypocritical and selfish, would we try to resolve that by going to extremes and maybe declaring our marriages open marriages just to avoid the hypocrisy? Or would it be to justify indulging our lusts selfishly?
Sin dies a horrible death fighting to stay alive. And it often plays dead. If Satan can get you into hell by convincing you that you’re religious enough, then he has been as effective as if he had turned you into a dangerous criminal, or perhaps more. If he can get you to live in sin and rub God’s nose in your constant patronizing and thwarting of His sacrifice of deep love, he would feel more satisfied in his revenge than if you worshiped Satan overtly.
So, our solution is to surrender to Christ in prayer and repent of our sin. We are told again, “Repent for the kingdom of God is at hand.” That does not mean, “Get religion fast because Jesus is coming fast”, though that may very well be true as well. However, it means the Kingdom of God is right there, and you need to get out of the kingdom of sin and into the Kingdom of God. You need to give up sin as your king. You need to give up lust and greed and selfishness and pride and hypocrisy as your king and when sin calls you to distrust and disobey Christ, you resist the devil and surrender to Jesus Christ. You embrace Jesus Christ through faith, and accept His grace to keep you faithful and sincere.
If there is one thing you would not surrender to Christ, you can count on it being the one thing Jesus Christ will call you to surrender. God will not allow any idols or other gods–not because He is egotistical. My goodness, what must He do to make that clear? Jesus gave up His place in heaven to come down to earth and die a painful death for us. Is that the behavior of an egotistical God? No. He says, “I am God” because that is who He is. It’s the truth. And it is better that He tell the truth than to tell a lie. And it is better for the entire universe and those around us that we trust Him and obey Him.
Now, He could just hardwire us all to be faithful and to love Him and one another, but that would make us into hardwired robots–not human beings with the capacity to choose, to love, to hate, to be good or to be evil. He gave us a free will, and now we need to do what He says which is to choose ye this day who we will serve.
We can choose Jesus and live, or we can choose to refuse Him and declare we would rather go to hell than love God and others. But given the sacrifice He made in love for us, we have no right to lie and say it is a cruel and horrible God who sends a person to hell when we send ourselves there by choosing to live in sin and choosing not to repent.
Jo Ann Griffin • Mar 17, 2012 at 10:13 am
So we all “DESERVE” hell? What happened to “LOVE”?…I must be gettin a different message, (Thank God!)
Raaktin • Mar 16, 2012 at 2:21 pm
Hell!?!? Where the strippers have STD’s and the beer runs stale? i dont wanna go to Hell!
-Proud Pastafarian
Sean Kiernan • Mar 16, 2012 at 11:28 am
I do not understand why this article is introducing me as the ASI senator for residence life. Neither Associated Students Inc. nor University Courtyard has any position on religion, and I do not use my opposition to religion within the function of my office. It would have made more sense to refer to me as VP of the Secular Student Alliance.
Nick • Mar 16, 2012 at 11:06 am
I deseve pork chops. When will Jesus bring the pork chops?
Nick • Mar 16, 2012 at 11:05 am
I deserve pork chops. When will Jesus bring the pork chops?
Marv • Mar 16, 2012 at 2:50 am
The sign states, “You deserve hell.” The key word is deserve. The Bible states, “for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.” Man has sinned against God, which God detest. According to the bible, your have to repent for your sins and must be born again to inherit the Kingdom of God. Yes as I believer in the Almighty God Christ Jesus, I know I deserve hell. Will I go to hell? No, because my sins are forgiven and I have repented and have full faith and full trust in God. I know where I will go when I step into eternity. In closing, we all want to go to heaven and not to hell, but what we doing heavenly? God is way, the truth, and life. “He who hears you, hears Me. He who rejects you rejects Me. He who rejects Me, rejects Him, who sent Me.” God Bless.
joshua4234 • Mar 15, 2012 at 11:44 pm
People like this thrive off attention, good or bad. The correct response is to ignore them. It saddens me to see people fall prey to obvious tactics of continuing to grow a ministry by being an attention whore.